
Journal and Proceedings of The Royal Society of New South Wales Volume 120 Parts 1 and 2 [Issued September, 1987] pp.9-19 Return to CONTENTS Evolution Evolving K. S. W. Campbell By the time he wrote the Origin of Species, Darwin had reached at least four main conclusions from his palaeontological studies: 1. Most fossils represented the hard parts (skeletons) of species that are not now found living – that is, a large number of species had become extinct. 2. Most fossils could be seen to have features in common with species that are still living – for example, skeletons that were obviously similar in many respects to those of modern reptiles could be found extending back in the record for some considerable time. 3. Overall it was possible to recognise a progression of complexity in organisms through geological time. From these three conclusions, together with observations on living animals, he drew the following inferences: fossils are related to living organisms by descent, or as he says “species have been produced by ordinary generation: old forms having been supplanted by new and improved forms of life...”(Darwin, 1859); or elsewhere “The inhabitants of each successive period in the world‟s history have beaten their predecessors in the race for life, and are, in so far, higher in the scale of nature: and this may account for that vague yet ill-defined sentiment, felt by many palaeontologists, that organisation on the whole had progressed” (author‟s italics). He was, however, only too well aware of a fourth point: 4. Although organisms from one period were different from, but related to, organisms from preceding and succeeding periods, it was not possible to find the graded sequences of organisms he had predicted. From this he concluded something quite different from what might have been expected – not that his idea of gradual transitions between species might be incorrect, but rather that the geological record was incomplete. After a long discussion of the matter he concluded “ ... all these causes taken conjointly, must have tended to make the geological record extremely imperfect, and will to a large extent explain why we do not find interminable varieties, connecting together all the extinct and existing forms of life by the finest graduated steps” (Darwin, 1859). In other words he accepted that the record overall was good enough to show the main patterns of evolution – that is, it established the fact of morphological change in a number of directions that he would have predicted, such as increasing complexity; but he considered that the record was not good enough to support the view that change had been as gradual as he thought it should be if his theory of natural selection was correct. This obviously caused him concern because he wrote: “Passing from these difficulties, all the other great leading facts in palaeontology seem to me simply to follow on the theory of descent with modification through natural selection” (Darwin, 1559, p. 343). It is clear from this and his previous statements that he introduced a serious confusion because he did not distinguish between the concept of evolution as descent with modification on the one hand, and the means by which this modification was thought to have taken place – namely, natural selection on the other. Of course the theory of natural selection was Darwin‟s main contribution to evolutionary studies, but the efficacy of natural selection could not be established or confirmed from the fossil record. All that he could have done was to show that (a) morphological change had been gradual; (b) that, by devising suitable measures, successive species had become more efficient; and (c) that these observations were consistent with, but did not establish, the hypothesis of natural selection. Therefore Darwin‟s statements left two bad legacies criticism of natural selection was taken by many protagonists as rejection of evolution, and the record was widely accepted to be very inadequate (Fig. 1). NEO-DARWINISM Fig. 1 Part of a figure produced in 1866 by the German biologist Haeckel. It shows his conception of the relationships between jawless fishes (Agnatha), sharks, skates and rays (Selachli), primitive ray-finned fishes (Canolds). advanced ray-finned fishes (Teleosts), lungfishes (Dipnol), amphibians and reptiles. This diagram illustrates the extent to which major branchings in the tree of life were considered to have taken p1ace in time intervals unrepresented in the fossil record. Not only are the initial branches shown in undifferentiated pre-Devonian time; many of the subsequent ones are in the pre- Carboniferous, pre-Triassic etc., time intervals without rock records. Fig. 2 Early and late representatives of the sea-urchin Micraster from the Chalk of England. They are separated by about 8 million years. During this time the conditions of sedimentation over the chalk basin remained relatively constant, and the genus was probably able to inhabit some part of the basin during that entire period. The main changes that took place involve proportions of the whole skeleton, the shapes of furrows and ridges, the position and shape of the mouth and its lip, the shape and division of the food- gathering (ambulacral) areas, and the general granulation of the whole surface. Several species have been recognised over the time interval; these have been arbitrarily defined because successive populations show intergradation. For the next forty years or so there was little effort on the part of palaeontologists to follow up this problem of continuously evolving sequences. This seems to have been the result of two factors: geologists were convinced that the record was so bad that such changes could not be found and it was useless searching for them; and many palaeontologists, while accepting that evolution had occurred, could not accept the idea that natural selection by itself could produce the changes observed. There were a few examples of gradual change forthcoming, such as Micraster in the Cretaceous chalk (Fig. 2) and Zaphrentis in the Carboniferous shales, but these were exceptional. Note that this is not to say that sequences could not be found, but rather that species transitions appeared at that time to be rare. The rediscovery of Mendel‟s genetics, and the great expansion of evolutionary thinking in the first thirty years of this century produced little impact on palaeontology, but during this period the concepts took shape that have dominated evolutionary thinking almost up till the present. These are known collectively as Neo-Darwinism or the Synthetic Theory. The essential tenets of this theory are: 1. Change took place by small steps. 2. Mutation is the raw material of evolution. 3. Mutation is not directed but occurs in a „random‟ fashion. 4. Direction and rate of change were imposed by the environment. 5. Rapid evolution took place in isolated populations of moderate size. 6. Rapid evolution took place in areas of geographic differentiation. 7. Evolutionary trends resulted from uni-directional selection. Note that this is a theory of evolutionary mechanisms. Clearly it will have implications for the course of evolution, and hence should be consistent with the fossil record. For example, it should be possible in many instances to correlate changes in structure with changes in environment. lt is true that some structures will presumably be selected for in a constant environment, simply because they enable the organisms bearing them to perform functions more efficiently. However, other structures will change because they are required to perform more efficiently in changing environments. The classic fossil example is the evolution of the horse which shows a number of „trends‟ all of which are consistent with a change from soft to hard ground, a change from soft nutritious food to hard less nutritious food, and a change from slow to fast movement, all at a time when the central North American region, where the horses were evolving, was changing from wet forest to dry prairie (Stahl, 1974). Although it played some part in the formulation of the synthetic theory, palaeontology was essentially reduced to providing possible examples of the theory of natural selection in action. SOME DISSENTERS Now this synthetic theory or Neo-Darwinism, was generally accepted by biologists, and it is still accepted by the majority today. However, in the 30‟s and 40‟s there were two groups who were uneasy about it. The first group was typified by one of the most influential evolutionary thinkers of this century – George Gaylord Simpson, an American. He wrote a book entitled “Tempo and Mode in Evolution” in 1944, and a revised and expanded book “The Major Features of Evolution” in 1953. He was not worried about the basics of the synthetic theory - in fact he was one of its main supporters; in particular he was convinced that natural selection was the directing force in evolution – His main reservation was that the theory did not explain all the observed phenomena. Though in his view the synthetic theory could explain gradual change from species to species, he doubted whether it could explain the evolution of groups such as families or even higher taxa, which often appear in the fossil record abruptly. Is it reasonable, he was asking, to expect that very rapid small-scale evolution could and did produce the large-scale abrupt effects that we observe? He concluded that such an explanation was not acceptable. Instead he decided that evolution had several modes. These came to be known by a variety of names, but we can consider them here as microevolution, macroevolution and megaevolution. Subsequently he retracted the term megaevolution. Microevolution was the kind of evolution that resulted in gradual transition between species, produced by a gradual spread of new genes through a population.
Details
-
File Typepdf
-
Upload Time-
-
Content LanguagesEnglish
-
Upload UserAnonymous/Not logged-in
-
File Pages17 Page
-
File Size-